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Archive for September, 2010

Michael Burks at the Blues Music Awards

September 29th, 2010 No comments

I just found this great video on The Blues Foundation Channel on YouTube.

It’s Michael Burks’ performance from the 2009 Blues Music Awards in Memphis, TN.

Michael was nominated for Contemporary Blues Male, Instrumental-Guitar and Rock Blues Album of the Year in 2009. To-date he has been nominated for 8 BMAs and finished 3rd and received the Albert King Award for most promising guitar player in the 11th International Blues Challenge.

With all respect to the late Albert King, Michael Burks is his second coming.

The complete DVD can be purchased at Blues.org.

Albert Castiglia – Keepin On – CD Released!

September 20th, 2010 No comments

Albert Castiglia - "Keepin On" CD

Blues guitarist Albert Castiglia released his 5th CD, Keepin On, last month.

Keepin On features five new original tunes, which display Albert’s continued growth as a songwriter and guitarist, plus his unique take on songs by John Lee Hooker (“I’m Goin’ Upstairs”), Mack Rice (“Cadillac Assembly Line”), T-Bone Walker (“My Baby Is Now on My Mind”), Robert Nighthawk (“Murderin’ Blues”) and Bob Dylan (“Till I Fell in Love with You”).

Albert Castiglia (pronounced “ka-STEEL-ya”), began playing guitar at the age of 12. In 1990, he became a member of The Miami Blues Authority and was later voted “Best Blues Guitarist” by New Times magazine in 1997. Shortly thereafter, he was spotted by legendary blues singer/harmonica player Junior Wells, who asked Castiglia to join his band as a guitarist and singer. With Wells as his mentor, Albert performed at clubs and festivals across America, as well as in Canada and Europe. During that time, he also got the opportunity to play and jam with many other blues stars, including Pinetop Perkins, Ronnie Earl, Billy Boy Arnold, Lurrie Bell, Jerry Portnoy, Eddy Clearwater and Otis Clay. After Junior Wells passed away, Castiglia toured with Atlanta blues singer Sandra Hall.

Castiglia is poised on the edge of a major breakout in the blues world. A soulful vocalist that reminds listeners of Van Morrison, a skilled instrumentalist, and a still-maturing songwriter that has gotten better with each album, Keepin On is the album that may make Albert Castiglia a household name among blues fans.

[Listen to the hard driving first track: "Cadillac Assemble Line"]

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Loud and Louder! Turn It Up! Your Guitar That Is…

September 19th, 2010 No comments

Turn It Up - The Movie

I received a tweet from Carl Verheyen today about a new movie he will be in soon.

The movie is titled: “Turn It Up!” and is a feature-length celebration of the electric guitar.

Hosted by Kevin Bacon, the film explores mankind’s passion for the electric guitar, and its effect on artists, everyday players, pop culture, history, and even politics.

Turn it Up! is THE STORY of the electric guitar, from the invention in the 1930s to its golden years, right through the phenomenon of the Guitar Hero video-game and the digital guitars of the future. But, it’s also a series of GUITAR STORIES, where we’ll meet all kinds of people from rock stars, to congressmen, CEOs, and teenage virtuosos, to try to understand their emotional connection to their guitars.

CHECK OUT THE TALENT LIST:

  • Kevin Bacon (Host)
  • Slash
  • Les Paul
  • B.B. King
  • Paul Stanley (Kiss)
  • Robby Krieger (The Doors)
  • John 5 (Marilyn Manson/Rob Zombie)
  • Jeff “Skunk” Baxter (Steely Dan/Doobie Bros)
  • Nancy Wilson (Heart)
  • Albert Lee
  • Mike Bloomfield
  • Jerry Cantrell (Alice in Chains)
  • Dickey Betts (Allman Brothers)
  • Ana Popovic (Serbian Blues Guitarist)
  • Steve Lukather (Toto – Studio Musician)
  • Dave Mason (Rock Hall of Fame & Traffic)
  • Carl Verheyen (Supertramp, Studio Guitarist)
  • Mark Slaughter (Slaughter)
  • Johnny A
  • Sean Costello
  • Bruce Kulick (Kiss)
  • Duane Betts (Puddle of Mudd)
  • Rick Vito (Fleetwood Mac/Bob Seger)
  • Spencer Davis (Spencer Davis Group)
  • Kristen Capolino (16-year-old Virtuoso)
  • Russell Ali (Rock star from Bangladesh)
  • Buddy Whittington (Guitarist, John Mayall Band)
  • Gibson Custom Shop
  • Fender Custom Shop
  • Rock & Roll Fantasy Camp
  • George Fullerton (Fender Pioneer)
  • Mike Eldred (Fender Custom Shop)
  • Henry Juszkiewicz  (CEO Gibson Guitars)
  • Richard Smith (Curator, Fullerton Museum)
  • The Burst Brothers (Vintage Experts, Guitar Center)
  • John Mameli
  • Trevor Lukather
  • Paul Hodes (congressman)
  • John Zambetti (Malibooz)
  • Johnny Z (Shwayze, Whitestarr)
  • Tim May (Jazz Guitarist & Top Session Player)
  • Gary Kelly (CEO Southwest Airlines/Blues guitarist)
  • NAMM Show
  • Line 6 (Digital Guitars and Amps)
  • Walter Carter (Guitar Expert/Author)
  • George Gruhn (Guitar Expert/Author)
  • Kai Huang (Co-Founder, Guitar Hero)
  • Robb Lawrence (Guitar Expert/author)
  • Randy Johnston – Texas Lawyer/guitarist
  • Perry Margouleff (Record Producer/collector)
  • John Shanks (Multi Grammy-Winning producer)
  • Andras Simonyi (Hungarian Ambassador/Guitarist)
  • Brian Fischer (Firebird Farm, 2,000+ guitars & amps)
  • David Brass of Fretted Americana (Guitar Expert/Collector)

You MUST SEE the trailer for this film!  Watch it by CLICKING HERE.

Visit the official site of the movie by CLICKING HERE:

Are You Afraid To Play Slow?

September 19th, 2010 2 comments

20 notes per minute vs 20 notes per second.

To each his own.

Music is an art form and I remember my “art appreciation” teacher in 11th grade passionately preaching to our class that the style one person likes may be drastically different than the style another person likes. But the fact that both styles are “liked” was much more important.

The video below was posted on YouTube a few days ago by Anthony Stauffer over at StevieSnacks.com (check it out – it’s a great blog and lesson site for learning the musical style of Stevie Ray Vaughan).

When you watch it, you will not hear any amazing solos or blistering riffs. You will not learn any new fingering patterns, chords or arpeggio combinations. Instead, what you will hear is a well thought out examination of why we play what we play and why we might want to consider making some changes to our style.

Thanks Anthony!

Jimmy Witherspoon and Duke Robillard Play the Slow Blues

September 18th, 2010 No comments

Jimmy Witherspoon & Duke Robillard

I love the Blues.

I really love Slow Blues.

I know, it’s simple and basic and all of the shredders can play twenty notes for every single note in a slow blues song.

But the slow blues moves me. It moves me like no other music. Ronnie Earl, Eric Clapton, The Allman Brothers, B.B. King, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Duke Robillard and so many many others made careers out of mastering the slow blues.

13 years ago today, September 18, 1997, we lost Jimmy Witherspoon. He was 77.

Jimmy was not a guitar player. He was a singer. A blues singer. And in this case, a slow blues singer.

This recording is Jimmy Witherspoon’s last before he passed away, leaving behind a long legacy of great blues recordings. Jimmy died of throat cancer, which is evident in this recording as his voice is quite weak.

Enjoy this soulful rendition of “Going Down Slow” with Duke Robillard providing backup on guitar.

[Listen to "Goin' Down Slow"]

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Jimi Hendrix Died 40 Years Ago Today…

September 18th, 2010 No comments

On September 18th, 1970, the world lost Jimi Hendrix.

Here is the actual VIDEO CLIP from ABC News:

Michael Somma “Blue Noize” Blues Guitar Contest Entry

September 13th, 2010 1 comment

Check out this video of my very good friend Michael Somma tearing up his PRS Hollowbody for the “Blue Noize” contest on YouTube. (That’s me doing the camera work with my trusty FLIP).

The deadline to enter the contest is TODAY, September 13, 2010 at 12:00 midnight.

Long live the BLUES!

Marc Playle – My Faith – Acoustic Guitar (Video)

September 12th, 2010 1 comment

Marc Playle was born in South Shields, England, UK on September 26th 1985. He first took an interest in playing guitar at the age of 14 when he and his friend Daniel were bored in the long summer holidays.

He converted half of his garage into a studio where he used to jam with his friends.

Having a missing left forearm meant he had to experiment to figure out the best way he could be able to play guitar.

After many ideas such as taping guitar picks to his arm and using socks and things he came up with the idea for a player which is a cast of his arm that was then made from acrylic resin. It has lots of features that enable him to do most techniques on the guitar such as: a cut out for palm muting and pinch harmonics, a part of a guitar pick for picking and a cut out of a leather belt used for tapping.

Marc has quite a story…and quite a talent. Not to mention an amazing drive to overcome anything that might get in the way of him playing his guitar.

Check out Marc online: http://www.marcplayle.com

Schecter Guitars 9-11 Ad – NEVER FORGET

September 11th, 2010 No comments

911adSchecter Guitar Research placed this ad in Guitar World Magazine last year.

It was a full page ad, with only a slightly visible logo for their company in the lower right corner.

The ad says it all, and is worth sharing here to remind us all of the tragic events of 9-11-2001.

Let us never forget those who’s lives changed forever 9 years ago today.

Thank you Schecter. We will never forget.

Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Live in Chicago CD REVIEW

September 8th, 2010 No comments

This is a follow up post to the press release about Kenny Wayne Shepherd’s upcoming CD that I posted a few days ago. If you missed that announcement, CLICK HERE.

Kenny Wayne Shepherd - Live! in Chicago

Many thanks to Loud & Proud for giving me access to “Live! in Chicago” before it’s official release on September 28th.

First of all, I have to say that this is one of the slickest CD covers I have seen in a long while. So much of today’s album artwork is thick on abstract but thin on communicating the artist and the heartbeat of the music. The cover of “Live in Chicago” gives you an instant visual of what you’ll get when you load this CD on you iPod.

It’s full of blistering, hard-driving, electric blues guitar.  ‘Nuff said.

I had my first taste of Kenny Wayne Shepherd live in Phoenix a few months ago when he shared the stage with a dozen other six-string icons during the “Experience Hendrix” tour.

The 4-hour marathon show included about a hour of Kenny across 3 different sets which were clearly the highlight for me.

This CD was recorded at Chicago’s House of Blues.  Shepherd and vocalist Noah Hunt combine five original songs with nine cover tunes to give blues lovers a fourteen track compilation of ripping blues excellence.

In addition to his regular touring band (which includes two members of Stevie Ray Vaughan’s Double Trouble) Shepherd is joined on stage by legendary bluesmen Bryan Lee (who gave Kenny a break at age 13 by allowing him to share the stage), Buddy Flett, Howlin’ Wolf guitarist Hubert Sumlin, Willie “Big Eyes” Smith and the amazing keyboard playing of Riley Osborne.

The concert starts off with a lively version of “Someday, Somewhere, Someway“, a song that pulls you to the edge of your seat in anticipation for what lies ahead. Shepherd nails the Louisiana rocker “King’s Highway” and the the entire band gets involved to blast “True Lies” with equal blending of gritty blues and hard rock.

It’s a one-two-three opening punch that grabs you and screams “Wake up and listen…this is gonna be good”!

[Listen to "Somehow, Somewhere, Someway" to see what I mean...]

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Deja Voodoo” is a track where Kenny bares his soul and shows his love for down and dirty bluesy rock.  It’s my favorite track.

B.B. King’s “Sell My Monkey” sounds like it is straight from the jukebox in 1957. It’s bouncy and fun…as you would expect.  Shepherd plays a slide-heavy version of Buddy Flett’s “Dance for Me Girl” that drips with emotion. There is an excellent cover of Jimmy Reed’s “Baby, Don’t Say that No More“.

Next up is a slow blues take of Ronnie Earls “Eye to Eye” which includes some great harmonica work. “How Many More Years” is a Howlin’ Wolf cover that rocks the 12-bar blues with KWS playing the signature lead licks.  “Sick and Tired” has a traditional R&B vibe that has been KWS’d to the max. I found it impossible to sit still while this one was playing.

Kenny plays tribute to some early blues in Hubert Sumlin style with his electrifying versions of “Feed Me” and “Rockin’ Daddy.”  Then comes the thick and heavy “Blue on Black“. This one will blow you away.  I found my head nodding with the beat as Kenny played his solo and before I realized it…my whole body was shaking.

The album closes with a hard driving cover of Slim Harpo’s “I’m a King Bee” which is definitely “blues rock in your face”. It’s very powerful and meant to be played loud — as if you are there in the front row.

Live! In Chicago is a must-have release for Kenny Wayne Shepherd fans and will serve as a quality introduction for the unfortunate few who have not yet heard his dynamic chops. And for everyone in between…this should push them over the edge to become serious KWS fans!

In Kenny’s own words: “Usually a live record is just live versions of all of your old stuff, but this collection is a diverse combination for the fans.”